Description
In the case of the Ceefax and Oracle systems and their successors, the teletext signal is transmitted as part of the ordinary analogue TV signal but concealed from view in the VBI (vertical blanking interval). The teletext signal is digitally coded as 45-byte packets at the end of each scan line (only lines 6 - 22 and 318 - 335 are used). The data rate is about 600bps.
Each page is comprised of one or more frames, each containing a screen-full of text. The pages are sent out one after the other in a continual loop. When the user requests a particular page the decoder simply waits for that page to be sent, and then captures it for display. In order to keep the delays short, enough to not be too bothersome, services typically only include a few hundred frames in total. Even with this limited number of frames, waits can be up to 30 seconds.
The original standard supported 24 rows of information with 40 characters a row. The standard was improved in 1976 to allow for improved appearance and color support. The proposed high resolution Level 2 (1981) was not adopted in Britain, although transmission rates were doubled from two to four lines a frame in 1981. The service extended to British commercial television through Teletext Ltd. Again, as an early adopter, Britain also rejected Level 2.5 (HighText).
The text can be displayed instead of the television image (but standard with the sound), or through it.
Although it used the same page encoding and display methods, Prestel was quite a different system, using a modem and the phone system to transmit and receive the data. The modem was asymmetric, with data sent at 75bps, and received 1200bps. This two-way nature allowed pages to be served on request, in contrast to the TV-based systems' sequential rolling method. It also meant that a limited number of extra services were available such as booking event or train tickets. Prestel was in some ways similar to the French Minitel system.
Digital television introduced "digital teletext", which despite the previous teletext standard's digital nature is actually has entirely different standards, such as MHEG-5 and Multimedia Home Platform.
See also
External Links
Teletext content on the Internet